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- Bay Leaf Cohousing is looking for people willing to relocate to the
- San Francisco Bay Area to help plan and build a vegan-friendly
- cohousing community. Cohousing communities are small-scale neighborhoods
- that offer a balance between community living and privacy. Individual
- units, equipped with kitchens, will have convenient access to shared
- living space including a "commonhouse" with a dining room, playroom,
- and workshops. Vegan dinners will be available in the commonhouse.
- For more information, call (415) 487-6335; or send a self-addressed,
- stamped envelope to: P.O. Box 40684, San Francisco, CA 94140-0684 (USA),
- or visit the group's web site at: http://www.cohousing.org/specific/bayleaf
-
- (From Vegetarian Times magazine)
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 06:43:16 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Friends of Animals <foa@igc.apc.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Narrow Victory At CITES
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970618093008.37df388a@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Yesterday, June 17th, an amendment by South Africa which would have
- downlisted the elephant populations of Zimbabwe, Botswana and Namibia
- but with no international trade in ivory for 18 months, was defeated by
- a margin of 3 votes!!!
-
- The South Africa amendment would also have established "experimental
- quotas for the 3 Southern African nations after 18 months. It was a
- narrow victory for our side. The issue has now been referred to
- a working group, and each country will submit individual proposals,
- so the fight is not yet over.
-
- More to come.
-
- Bill Dollinger, FoA
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 09:07:03 -0700
- From: Houston SPCA <hspca@neosoft.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Hou-TX) Houston SPCA investigating multiple dog & cat deaths in SE Houston
- Message-ID: <33A807A7.91B@neosoft.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- HOUSTON (June 17, 1997)- Officials at the Houston SPCA are urging pet
- owners in a southeast Houston neighborhood to closely guard their animals
- and bring them indoors following the gruesome discovery of three dead
- dogs, one dead kitten, and one comatose dog early this morning.
- An animal cruelty investigator from the Houston SPCA responded to a call
- for assistance from the Houston Police Department at about 10 o'clock
- this morning in the 1500 block of 70th street. At the intersection of
- 70th St. and Avenue P, he found three dogs dead and a fourth, alive, but
- comatose.
- The dead animals had blood running from their mouths and noses. there
- were no other signs of trauma or injury. A dead kitten was found on an
- adjacent street.
- A Houston SPCA veterinarian conducted a necropsy on one of the deaad
- dogs. She suspected that the animals ingested an anti-coagulant poison.
- Stomach contents are being sent to Texas A&M to confirm the diagnosis.
- The Houston SPCA is offering a $1,000 reward leading to the arrest and
- conviction of the suspect or suspects in this deliberate animal killing.
- If you have information related to the case, please call the Houston SPCA
- Cruelty Investigations Department at (713) 869-7722 ext.124.
- E-mail can be sent to ; hspca@neosoft.com
- Website ; http://www.neosoft.com/~hspca
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 09:48:20 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Mike Markarian <MikeM@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, seac+announce@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu,
- en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Good News on Pigeon Shoots!
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970618130602.5507169c@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Yesterday, the Sarasota County (Florida) Commission unanimously agreed to
- ban live bird shooting contests. This will put a halt to the controversial
- pigeon shoot at the Hi Hat Ranch.
-
- Last Thursday, a judge in Portugal ruled that the "European Championship"
- pigeon shoot is illegal, and cannot take place.
-
- Pennsylvania will be next...
-
- -- Mike Markarian, The Fund for Animals
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 12:05:49 -0700 (PDT)
- From: bchorush@paws.org (pawsinfo)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Rally for Release of Taiji Survivors [Seattle WA]
- Message-ID: <199706181905.MAA13019@siskiyou.brigadoon.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Rally for Release of Taiji Survivors
-
- Seattle , WA
-
- Friday, June 20 Noon
-
- Location:
- Consulate-General of Japan
-
- 601 Union Street, Suite 500
-
- Seattle, Washington 98101, U.S.A.
-
-
- Please Contact the Consulate-General of Japan To voice your sadness over the
- two orca deaths and
- to express the hope that the remaining Taiji orcas will be returned to the
- wild.
-
- Seattle numbers
- Tel: (1-206) 682-9107
- Fax: (1-206) 624-9097
-
- Up to the minute information re. Taiji as well as phone/fax numbers for
- Japanese Consulates around the world are available at:
- http://www.paws.org/activists/taiji
-
- For more information or to help with rally contact: Amy Schlachtenhaufen
- 206-860-4128 <amys@lighthawk.org>
-
-
- Bob Chorush Web Administrator, Progressive Animal Welfare Society (PAWS)
- 15305 44th Ave West (P.O. Box 1037)Lynnwood, WA 98046 (425) 787-2500 ext
- 862, (425) 742-5711 fax
- email bchorush@paws.org http://www.paws.org
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 15:13:05 +0000
- From: alisong@nicom.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: PETA hit with gag order by lab
- Message-ID: <33A7FB01.411F@nicom.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- PETA sent out this news release today--
-
- PETA HIT WITH GAG ORDER BY MULTIMILLION-DOLLAR LABORATORY
-
- Norfolk, Va.-- First came Food Lion v. ABC News. Now, in only the
- second case of its kind, a multinational corporation is suing PETA,
- alleging that it used hidden cameras and secured employment for an
- undercover investigator who worked in a laboratory where animals are
- poisoned and killed in product tests.
-
- The lab, Huntingdon Life Sciences in East Millstone, NJ, is a
- British-owned business with four facilities around the world.
- Huntingdon offers its services to test products for corporations. In
- England, two Huntingdon employees are scheduled to appear in court on
- June 26 on charges of cruelty to animals. A television news crew
- caught one employee punching a beagle in the face.
-
- "Everyone who cares about justice should be angered by this case. It
- strikes at the heart of the First Amendment and seeks to stifle
- social-change groups," says PETA President Ingrid Newkirk. "Are laws
- that protect animals less important than laws protecting those who
- hurt and kill them?"
-
- For 17 years, PETA's main modus operandi has been to document graphic
- animal cruelty and flagrant violations of the federal Animal Welfare
- Act through undercover investigations. Many of these covert efforts
- have resulted in the facilities being closed or fined by the
- government.
-
- PETA fought a libel action in Las Vegas after a PETA undercover
- investigator filmed entertainer Bobby Berosini beating orangutans
- backstage before performances at the Stardust Hotel. The Nevada
- Supreme Court found that PETA had only shown the public what had
- actually taken place. Bobby Berosini has been ordered to pay PETA's
- court costs in the action.
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 15:44:38 -0400 (EDT)
- From: MINKLIB@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: ALF Wins Another Victory in Anti Fur Offensive
- Message-ID: <970618154401_101479108@emout01.mail.aol.com>
-
- It was confirmed today that the Richardson Fur Center of Dallas, TX was
- forced out of business at the beginning of the month by the ALF.
-
- According to a listing of ALF attacks published in No Compromise, the
- Richardson Fur Center had been hit by the ALF 6 or 7 times since last fall.
- The group had smashed windows, paint bombed the store front, and glued the
- locks according to published reports.
-
- A company that neighbored the fur store confirmed that it was the direct
- action attacks of the ALF that forced the furriers to close.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 19:58:13 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) `McVerdict' Will Be a Whopper
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970618195809.0070b17c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------------
- 06/18/1997 17:08 EST
-
- `McVerdict' Will Be a Whopper
-
- By DIRK BEVERIDGE
- AP Business Writer
-
- LONDON (AP) -- The McVerdict is almost in.
-
- After fighting the longest battle ever waged in an English court, the
- multibillion-dollar McDonald's Corp. finds out Thursday whether it was
- able to defeat two vegetarian activists who call the company the epitome
- of evil multinational capitalism.
-
- The judge, Justice Roger Bell, has spent six months preparing a verdict
- in the ``McLibel'' case that court officials say fills three volumes.
-
- After listening to 313 days of testimony and arguments, and reading
- through 40,000 pages of evidence, Bell's judgment is so bulky that
- officials say only a summary will be made immediately available for
- public consumption.
-
- Even the abbreviated version will take about an hour and a half for the
- judge to explain, court officials said Wednesday.
-
- Legal experts have predicted Bell's decision will be a hollow victory for
- McDonald's, after the hamburger giant used a high-powered libel team
- against the defendants, unemployed ex-postman Dave Morris and part-time
- bar worker Helen Steel, who represented themselves wearing jeans and
- sweatshirts.
-
- If Morris and Ms. Steel should somehow win, McDonald's would face
- enormous humiliation after fighting for years in a case estimated to have
- cost 10 million pounds ($16 million).
-
- Regardless of the judge's ruling, Morris and Ms. Steel claim they are the
- real victors because they were able to draw much attention to their
- criticism of the company's business practices.
-
- The battle began years ago, when McDonald's went after activists from the
- obscure left-wing group London Greenpeace, not related to the well-known
- Greenpeace International, for handing out anti-McDonald's pamphlets
- outside the company's fast-food outlets in Britain.
-
- McDonald's says the pamphlets -- entitled ``What's wrong with McDonald's,
- Everything they don't want you to know'' -- are totally false and
- defamatory.
-
- The leaflet, which Morris and Ms. Steel call ``the fact sheet,'' accuses
- McDonald's of paying low wages, fighting union organization, abusing
- workers and animals, serving beef raised on former rainforest land,
- promoting an unhealthy diet and targeting children through seductive
- advertising campaigns that feature the clown Ronald McDonald.
-
- Although the activists likely would have gained little attention with the
- original leaflets, the case has attracted widespread media attention,
- including a global anti-McDonald's Internet site, numerous news articles
- and broadcast reports, a book and a recent British television miniseries.
-
- McDonald's said it was only seeking to protect its reputation, but the
- activists say their supporters will keep on handing out tens of thousands
- of the anti-McDonald's leaflets no matter which way the judge rules.
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 20:03:20 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (BE) EU Sets Genetic Food Label Rules
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970618200318.006f2450@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------------
- 06/18/1997 12:50 EST
-
- EU Sets Genetic Food Label Rules
-
- BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- Responding to public concern about food safety,
- the European Union on Wednesday approved a measure requiring companies to
- label genetically modified food.
-
- The move is certain to spark complaints from the United States.
-
- U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky earlier in the week told EU
- officials that Washington would view labeling as a possible violation of
- world trade rules.
-
- American farmers, who are big producers of genetically modified soybeans
- and corn, say separating the crops is nearly impossible and would be
- prohibitively expensive.
-
- U.S. grain producers also fear that labeling genetically modified food
- would mislead consumers into thinking the products were defective.
-
- In a statement announcing the EU decision, Ritt Bjerregaard, the group's
- environment chief, said the labels would provide ``valuable information
- for the consumer'' and were not intended to scare away the public from
- genetically altered products.
-
- The rules will require companies seeking EU approval of gene-modified
- products to identify them as such on ``a label or an accompanying
- document.''
-
- EU officials said all 15 member nations must put the labeling law into
- effect by July 31.
-
- European farm, environmental and consumer groups have called for the
- labels, arguing the grain has not been adequately tested for safety.
-
- Austria and Luxembourg have banned the import of genetically modified
- grain, saying the herbicides and antibiotic-resistant chemicals used in
- its production could cause adverse reactions in some individuals.
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 20:10:22 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Farm Trade Hits Obstacle in Europe
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970618201020.006ebb9c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- more on genetically engineered food/livestock
- from AP Wire page:
- --------------------------------------
- 06/18/1997 18:09 EST
-
- Farm Trade Hits Obstacle in Europe
-
- By CURT ANDERSON
- AP Farm Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- European suspicion of genetics technology in farming
- and food has become a major trade stumbling block for American
- agriculture, Clinton administration officials said Wednesday.
-
- U.S. negotiators are having a tough time convincing the 15-nation
- European Union that the technology is safe because the opposition is not
- based on science, Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman said.
-
- ``It's based on ideology, culture, religion,'' Glickman told the Senate
- Agriculture Committee. ``The attitude is, it's not what God intended.''
-
- The fight is over use of genetic engineering for a wide range of farm
- purposes, including making plants tougher against pests and fattening
- cattle for market. The United States insists these practices are
- perfectly safe.
-
- The United States recently won a preliminary victory when a panel of the
- World Trade Organization ruled that the EU's ban on use of hormones in
- beef was unjustified because it was not based on science. Hormones are
- used in 90 percent of U.S. beef.
-
- The Europeans are expected to appeal that ruling after it is finalized,
- and they remain opposed to other U.S. goods and commodities that have
- been genetically modified.
-
- On Wednesday, the EU approved rules requiring companies seeking approval
- of gene-modified products to identify them as such on ``a label or
- accompanying document.'' All 15 member nations must comply by July 31.
-
- Ritt Bjerregaard, the EU environment chief, said the labels would provide
- ``valuable information for the consumer'' and were not intended to scare
- the public away from genetically altered products.
-
- U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky told the committee that a
- move toward segregation of the genetically modified products could cost
- American farmers $3 billion to $5 billion in lost exports.
-
- ``That can't be tolerated, especially when segregation is done based on
- purely political goals, and not based on science at all,'' Barshefsky
- said.
-
- She added that EU steps toward labeling or segregation will likely
- trigger a U.S. complaint against the Europeans with the World Trade
- Organization. The WTO enforces international trade agreements.
-
- Glickman plans to stress the subject Thursday in a speech in London to
- the International Grains Council, a private industry organization the
- United States hopes will help change European attitudes toward genetic
- modifications.
-
- ``Truth is truth. Science is science. We've got to keep pushing that,''
- Glickman said.
-
- Sen. Dick Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee,
- said USDA statistics show that by 2000, one-third of U.S. farm products
- will be sold overseas and that agriculture production worldwide must
- increase to meet a growing population.
-
- ``Without the biotechnology changes, we're not going to get there,''
- Lugar said. ``We cannot yield on that. They (the EU) are going to have to
- get out of their funk.''
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 17:23:14 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: ACTION ALERT - Taiji Tragedy
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970618172346.26d72dbe@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Posted to the list on behalf of Whalesave
-
- >Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 15:39:59 -0800
- >
- >ACTION ALERT
- >TAIJI TRAGEDY
- >
- >Please help! Two of the five orca whales brutally captured off Taiji,
- >Japan on February 7, have now died in captivity.
- >
- >E-mail/fax the Prime Minister of Japan urging him not to allow the
- >replacement of these two dead orcas, and to free the remaining three whales
- >before it's too late. It would be helpful if you cc. your letter to the
- >other fax numbers provided below.
- >
- >1. Mr Ryutaro Hashimoto, Prime Minister of Japan
- > Fax: 81 3 5511 8855
- > EMAIL MESSAGES to Japanese Prime Minister's official residence:
- > email address: jpm@kantei.go.jp
- > homepage: http://www.kantei.go.jp/jp/question.html
- >
- >2. Mr. Michio Ahimada, Director of the National Fishery Agency
- > Fax: 81 3 3502 0794
- >
- >3. Mr. Isamu Nishiguchi, Governor of Wakayama-prefecture
- > Fax: 81 734 31 2244
- >
- >4. Mr.Takamasa Ikeda, Director of Japan Zoo and Aquarium Association
- > Fax: 81 3 3837 1231
- >
- >5. Mr. Ozaki, Director of the Shirahama Adventure World
- > Fax: 81 739 43 3345
- >
- >6. Consulate of Japan in Vancouver
- >Fax: (604) 684-6939
- >
- >7. Embassy of Japan in Ottawa
- >Fax: (613) 241-2232
- >
- >Please contact us for more information.
- >Thank you!
- >
- >Annelise Sorg
- >Director
- >Coalition For No Whales In Captivity
- >102-1365 West Fourth Avenue
- >Vancouver, BC. V6H 3Y8 Canada
- >Tel: (604) 736-9514 - Fax; (604) 731-2733
- >E-mail: annelise@direct.ca
- >
- >
- >
- >
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 20:47:52 -0600 (MDT)
- From: Jennifer Kolar <jkolar@monsoon.colorado.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, ar-views@envirolink.org
- Subject: 4th of July: Independence for Whom!?
- Message-ID: <199706190247.UAA14423@monsoon.colorado.edu>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
-
- Content-MD5: l/qhozYD7y5nQ/4j3lOKpA==
-
-
- It has been the tradition of a group of local social and economic justice
- activists to protest outside the local fireworks display each
- 4th of July.
-
- People go out on the 4th of July with their blood sickeningly thick
- with patriotism. They are celebrating the independence of the US
- from the opressive regime of England.. what a perfect time to remind
- the people of the US that the US itself is probably the most oppressive
- power on Earth!
-
- Need some examples?
-
- The US is using GATT and NAFTA trade policies to single-handedly destroy
- the environmental and animal protection policies which stand in various
- countries.
- Tuna caught in Mexico is able through NAFTA to be labeled dolphin-safe,
- even when it isn't.
- The US is using GATT to prevent the EU from banning wild-caught
- fur
- The US is also using GATT to sue countries that have defied the US
- and already banned wild-caught fur.
- NAFTA and GATT have been used to move many factories to Mexico and
- Asia where products are produced in sweat-shop conditions where
- workers make pennies a week and work long long hours in unregulated
- factories. The products: tennis shoes, jeans, etc...
-
- The US is more and more pushing the death penalty.. The US is one of the
- only developed nations in the world left to have a death penalty.
-
- The US is decrying terrorism , both internationally and nationally, while
- waging more wars on foreign governments either directly, or through
- embargos, or through supporting individual leaders and providing arms than
- any other country. Additionally, the US fights wars on its own citizens
- while at the same time claiming them to be the terrorists: the ALF, the
- AIM, the black panthers..
-
- The IMF and world bank, dominated by the US force desperate countries which
- need loans to accept US capitalist policies. The US forces these
- countries to spend the money on particular projects planned by the US, not
- by the local economies. These projects bring US industries to these countries,
- rely heavily on exporting raw materials to be processed in the US and then
- shipped back to these countries, preventing local economies from becomming
- self-sufficient. The projects which the US imposes are invariably things
- such as Dams or clear-cutting or mining, things which produce goods
- desired by the US and which are controlled by the US and destroy the
- local environment and economies.
-
- The US has provided China w/ favored nation status so that we can continue
- to put more and more US industry in China and to make more and more
- money off of exports to China even though their human rights policies have
- been condemned.
-
- The US has a long-standing embargo against Cuba, starving its people and
- destroying its economy.
-
- The US has openened more and more of its animal reserves to hunting, logged
- more and more of its wild lands, damned more and more of its rivers all the
- time.
-
- The US is locking up more and more people of color and poor people in
- prison than ever before. 1/3 of all black men will have spent time in
- prison in their lives.
-
- The US actively supports COINTELPRO operations both in the US and in
- foreign countries to smash any political force it disagrees with.
-
- The US enslaves animals and humans and the environment for its greedy
- desires, with no regard for the lives of those it destroys.
-
- The US and its disregard for toxic chemical laws and pollution laws
- is building all of its toxic factories in poor non-white neighborhoods, is
- destroying the environment and changing climate across the world more
- drastically than anytime since the industrial revolution.
-
- Enough yet??
-
- So.. everyone.. on this 4th of July.. in each of your towns get the local
- AR and social justice people and environmental people, make out
- some leaflets addressing some of these or other issues and get out there
- and be creative and let people know what hypocrits they are being by
- celebrating this "wonderful and free " nation which oppresses everything it
- possibly can. Even England, the nation we celebrate our freedom from is
- far more progressive now on the above issues than the US has dreamed of being.
-
- So get out there and throw this absurdity and hypocracy in Clinton's and the
- people's faces.
-
- It doesn't need much planning, it doens't need to be huge. The people
- will all go to one place for you for 4th of July events.. all it takes is
- a few local people in each city. And now, as movements are finally connecting
- these issues and international politics, which is heavy-handed by this
- government, are becomming more dominant and social, environmental, and
- animal issues are becomming blatantly connected... now is the time to
- respond!
-
-
- Jen Kolar
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 21:56:15 -0400
- From: David Rolsky <David.J.Rolsky-2@tc.umn.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, soar@waste.org
- Subject: [US] Minnesota Activist Freeman Wicklund to be Sentenced Again
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970618215613.00685de8@gold.tc.umn.edu>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- June 19, 1997
-
- Animal Activist Freeman Wicklund
-
- to be Sentenced Again
-
- Animal
- rights activist Freeman Wicklund is being sentenced
- for several more misdemeanors relating to the Minnesota hunter's
- rights law this Friday at 9:00 AM. The sentencing will take
- place at the Scott County Court House, Judge Atkins
- presiding. The court house is located at 428 South Holmes
- Street in Shakopee.
-
-
- Wicklund was originally sentenced to probation and a fine for an arrest
- related to a hunting protest in November of 1995, at which 11 other
- activists were arrested. During this protest no one was injured and no
- property was damaged. The protest was at a public park.
-
-
- In a letter to Judge Atkins, he said "I will not give money to a court
- system that criminalizes free speech and the prevention of violence." He
- also has stated that he feels that probation violates his free speech and
- rights to protest. Instead, he is requesting that his sentence be
- converted to an amount of jail time commensurate with his crime, which
- Mr. Wicklund defines as one day. Judge Atwood will deliver his ruling on
- Friday.
-
-
- In March of this year, Wicklund was sentenced to 90 days in jail by
- Judge Joan Lancaster for charges relating to a protest at the president
- of the University of Minnesota. Wicklund spent 14 days on hunger
- strike before Judge Lancaster forced him to take a year's
- probation. Wicklund has stated that if he is given jail time, he
- will hunger strike again until his release.
-
- Date: Wed, 18 Jun 1997 23:46:33 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (JP) Two Killer Whales die in Japan
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970618234442.006c9800@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------------
- 06/18/1997 23:40 EST
-
- Two Killer Whales die in Japan
-
- TOKYO (AP) -- Two killer whales captured from the sea earlier this year
- have died at an amusement park in western Japan.
-
- Nanki Shirahama Adventure World bought three of the 10 whales taken from
- the waters near Wakayama prefecture on Feb. 7, according to an official
- of the Wakayama prefectural fisheries agency.
-
- The first, a male, died June 14. Three days later, a female died. The
- third remains at the park.
-
- The cause of the deaths was not known, the fisheries agency official
- said. The dead whales were transported to Wakayama prefectural medical
- school for autopsies.
-
- Of the other whales caught in February -- their capture triggered
- protests from animal rights activists at home and abroad -- two are being
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